Delay on Ohio SB 310 action in House; Compromise proposed

Posted by Laura Arnold  /   May 22, 2014  /   Posted in Uncategorized  /   No Comments

Ohio Senate Bill 310 derailed; coalition favoring efficiency and renewable energy proposes another compromise

By John Funk, The Plain Dealer  Follow on Twitter
on May 21, 2014 at 3:40 PM, updated May 21, 2014 at 9:33 PM

COLUMBUS, Ohio -- A new coalition of business, industrial and consumer groups is proposing a compromise to end the stalemate on the controversial legislation that would freeze Ohio's renewable energy and efficiency laws for two years.

The group is suggesting a one-year freeze on the efficiency and renewable standards that have increased annually since 2008, and a cost cap that would protect small business and consumers from increases in bills to pay for efficiency programs.

The compromise proposal comes on the heels of what appears to be chaos among House Republicans whose majority caucus on Tuesday ended with Speaker William Batchelder declaring there were not enough votes to pass the legislation, known as Senate Bill 310.

Some members wanted to know why there is a rush. Leadership in both chambers has been working to have legislation approved and on the governor's desk before summer break in early June. The House only received the bill on May 8 and has held only a handful of hearings. The Senate debated the issue for months, with an original bill ending in a failure to muster sufficient votes.

The House caucus included an unusual appearance from Sen. William Seitz, the Cincinnati Republican and chair of the Senate public utilities committee, and an outspoken critic of the 2008 law that has required utilities to use an annually increasing amount of renewable energy while simultaneously developing programs to help customers use less energy through efficiency upgrades.

Sen. Troy Balderson, a Zanesville Republican and primary sponsor of the bill, also addressed the caucus, telling representatives what he told the House utilities committee earlier -- that the bill would be changed to make sure utilities could not  substitute Canadian hydro power for closer wind and solar power.

"That was definitely a mistake that did not mean to be put into the bill," Balderson told a reporter in an interview on Wednesday.

A shorter freeze to study the standards will create less disruption.

The compromise would also allow heavy industry to escape the efficiency standards on Jan. 1, 2015 -- if they agree to bid their efficiency gains into an annual auction by the company that manages the grid in Ohio and 12 other states.

Because efficiency upgrades reduce demand -- and therefore power prices, the coalition argues that if formally bid, the efficiency gains will help consumers and small businesses by keeping prices lower.

"A shorter freeze to study the standards will create less disruption in Ohio's emerging clean energy industry and will allow the state to develop the best path forward sooner rather than later," said Dayna Baird Payne, spokeswoman for the American Wind Energy Association, in a statement accompanying the proposal.

The proposed compromise follows a day of heavy lobbying at the State House by utility representatives, several of whom were seen entering Speaker Batchelder's office. It comes after two news conferences, one by two Northeast Ohio Democratic House members and one by a coalition of religious groups who appealed to Gov. John Kasich and lawmakers to leave the current laws intact.

State Reps. Mike Foley, a Cleveland Democrat, and Robert Hagan, a Youngstown Democrat, quoting a document submitted to state regulators by FirstEnergy Corp., said the efficiency standards in place since 2009 helped consumers save $2 for every $1 spent on efficiency programs.

"There is a reason GOP lawmakers are thinking twice about moving this bill," said Rep. Hagan. "Instead of continuing to focus on a rapidly developing sector of our economy, this bill amounts to a big handout to utility companies at the expense of Ohio consumers and businesses. Ohioans are seeing this 310 for what it really is -- a political favor that benefits a few wealthy, well-connected political supporters at a substantial cost for the rest of us."

Foley said the bill, as currently written, would move Ohio backwards as other states and nations continue efficiency and renewable programs.

"This isn't just a handout to big energy corporations, but it's a handout to surrounding states and other countries that will see more advanced energy business because Ohio wants to move backwards," said Rep. Foley.

One of the members of the coalition supporting the compromise, Ohio Advanced Energy Economy, earlier this week began airing a 30-second ad on television and over the Internet in defense of keeping the standards as they are and urging viewers to call their lawmakers in protest to keep the state from returning to "the Rust Belt."

Balderson said he had no problems with the attack ad.

"They're allowed to run opposition, and that's fine. They're expressing their views and they're expressing their opinions.

"I understand what they're doing. I don't necessarily always agree with it, but I understand, and I respect that they're doing."

But he doubted the passage of the bill would return Ohio's economy to rust belt conditions.

"This bill is a freeze - it's a temporary freeze, and it's two years," he said. "After that two years is up, it's going to restart again in 2017 if the legislature does not come back with an answer of ideas of something."

Jeremy Pelzer of Northeast Ohio Media Group contributed to this story.

UPDATE: No Vote Today on Ohio SB 310 to freeze Ohio green energy standards

Posted by Laura Arnold  /   May 21, 2014  /   Posted in Uncategorized  /   No Comments

IndianaDG just received an update that after a House caucus last night action on SB 310 today (5/21/14) was cancelled. Action expected one week from today. LA

TV ads, arguments a prelude to expected vote on green-energy bill

By Dan Gearino The Columbus Dispatch  •  Tuesday May 20, 2014 5:27 PM

Both sides in a debate about whether to freeze Ohio’s “green” energy standards pressed their cases today at the Statehouse and beyond, ahead of a House vote that may happen as soon as Wednesday.

Opponents said the proposal, Senate Bill 310, would lead to an increase in utility bills, an increase in pollution and the loss of jobs.

“We are on the verge of making one of the biggest public policy mistakes that we have seen in this state in many, many years,” said Democratic gubernatorial nominee Ed FitzGerald in a conference call.

At the same time, a House panel held a daylong hearing in which about 50 people testified, including the bill’s sponsor, Sen. Troy Balderson, R-Zanesville. He said the freeze is necessary to allow for time to study whether the rules are helping or hurting businesses.

“One thing is clear: There is increasing uncertainty about the effect of the mandates on ratepayers,” he said.

The bill passed the Senate earlier this month.

A group opposing the bill began airing a television ad today that says the bill will “ send us back to the Rust Belt.” The ad is now running the central Ohio media market and may be expanded to other markets, according to the sponsor, Ohio Advanced Energy Economy.

The proposal calls for a two-year freeze in standards for renewable energy and energy efficiency, along with changes to the standards when they resume in 2017. For example, the bill says that utilities would no longer be required to buy half of their renewable energy from in-state sources.

At the hearing, opponents of the bill outnumbered supporters by about three-to-one. Many of the supporters had testified at hearings last week.

“What does a moratorium do to the businesses that provide energy-efficiency services and employ Ohioans who implement the programs?” asked Rob Kelter, an attorney for the Environmental Law and Policy Center, in written testimony. “What business can sit idle for two years and just pick up where it left off?”

Michael McDorman, president and CEO of the Greater Springfield Chamber of Commerce, urged lawmakers to support the bill, saying the freeze “is needed to ensure we are headed in the right direction.”

House Democrats asked Balderson how the bill would affect the state’s ability to comply with upcoming federal rules on power-plant emissions. The long-anticipated rules will likely be released in the next few weeks by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.

“I’m not familiar with federally what you’re referring to,” Balderson said. “I was never made aware of that.”

Rep. Mike Stinziano, D-Columbus, asked for Balderson’s view of an alternative plan submitted by a coalition of companies – including Honda, DuPont and Campbell Soup – that would reduce the energy-efficiency standards without freezing them.

Balderson said the plan “did not come across my desk” so he could not comment on it.

dgearino@dispatch.com

@dispatchenergy

Governor Pence Appoints Carol Stephan as Chair of Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission

Posted by Laura Arnold  /   May 20, 2014  /   Posted in Uncategorized  /   No Comments
Carol Stephan click for photo

Pence names woman to IURC post

May 20, 2014  |   Filed under: People  |   Posted by: 

Staff report
TheStatehouseFile.com

INDIANAPOLIS – Gov. Mike Pence has named the first woman to chair the Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission.

Carol Stephan, who was first appointed a commissioner earlier this year, will take the post over from Jim Atterholt, who stepped down to become the governor’s chief of staff.

Pence called Stephan a “servant leader in every sense of the word” who has the vision and drive to lead the commission, which oversees regulated electric, gas and communications companies.

“Given her depth of knowledge and passion for the commission’s work, I am confident she will continue to strengthen the agency’s efforts and will work tirelessly to ensure the very best service for Hoosier utilities customers across the state,” he said.

Before becoming a commissioner, Stephan served as the agency’s assistant general counsel. She has also worked as general counsel for the Indiana Office of Utility Consumer Counselor, which represents customers in utility cases before the IURC.

She’s been the interim deputy commissioner and director of partner services for the Indiana Department of Workforce Development and deputy attorney General in the bankruptcy/inheritance tax division in the attorney general’s office.

Stephan took her first action on Tuesday, naming IURC Commissioner Carolene Mays to serve as vice chair, a position she had assumed informally in recent years.

 

If Ohio eases green-energy rules, will it spark national trend? What role is ALEC playing on Ohio SB 310?

Posted by Laura Arnold  /   May 20, 2014  /   Posted in Uncategorized  /   No Comments

Sen. Bill Seitz, R-Cincinnati, described complaints linking the easing of Ohio’s green-energy standards to the American Legislative Exchange Council, a national conservative group, as “ridiculous.”

 If Ohio eases green-energy rules, will it spark national trend?

Americans for Prosperity throws support behind bill to put efficiency, renewable-source standards on hold

By Dan Gearino,The Columbus Dispatch  •  Tuesday May 20, 2014 7:08 AM Comments: 6

Ohio is on the cusp of becoming the first state to significantly ease its renewable-energy standards, a milestone that would be noticed in statehouses across the country where similar debates are being waged.Proposals have gained traction in Kansas and several other states and have at least been introduced in a dozen or so others.

But none has had as much success as Ohio’s Senate Bill 310, which has passed the Senate and appears poised to pass the House as soon as this week.

The Ohio bill would place a two-year freeze on annual increases in standards for renewable energy and energy efficiency. It also would repeal a rule that says utilities must buy half of their renewable energy from in-state sources and would make it easier for utilities to buy low-cost hydroelectric power and count it toward the standards.

Many of the same groups with an interest in the subject are active in multiple states. The American Wind Energy Association, Sierra Club and others are fighting to maintain rules that say utilities must obtain a certain amount of their energy from renewable sources. Meanwhile, the American Legislative Exchange Council, or ALEC, and Americans for Prosperity are helping to push for change in the rules.

The players disagree on whether the apparent support for the Ohio bill is based on state-specific factors or represents the beginning of a trend that will take hold in other places.

“I wouldn’t call it a trend,” said Chelsea Barnes, research analyst at Keyes, Fox & Wiedman, a law firm that represents clean-energy clients with offices in California and North Carolina. “ Ohio is an outlier.”

The fact that so many states are exploring changes to their rules is a sign that the rules are flawed, said Mike O’Neal, president and CEO of the Kansas Chamber of Commerce. He was one of the leading supporters of a bill that passed the Kansas Senate last year before being defeated in the House.

“I would tend to think that if there’s a state that pulls back successfully, that there will be more of an impetus to do that in other states,” he said.

Yesterday, Americans for Prosperity issued a statement supporting the Ohio bill. The national conservative group, financed in part by billionaires David and Charles Koch, has supported similar proposals in other states but has not been active on the Ohio plan until now.

Ohio is among a group that includes 29 states and the District of Columbia that have renewable-energy requirements, which have helped to increase the market for wind, solar and other renewable energy sources.

Ohio also is one of 22 states that have energy-efficiency rules, which provide incentives to encourage customers to reduce their electricity use. (Indiana repealed its efficiency standard in March, becoming the first and only state to do so.) [Emphasis added]

The state laws were almost all passed in the 2000s; Ohio’s renewable and energy-efficiency rules were both part of Senate Bill 221 in 2008.

Barnes’ firm tracks activity in each state and has identified 13 types of proposed changes to the laws that have tended to recur. They range from a complete repeal of renewable-energy rules to provisions that expand the types of energy that count as renewable. Senate Bill 310 includes at least six of those types of changes.

The various state proposals are often similar because the same outside groups are helping to write them, Barnes said.

“It’s been mostly ALEC behind a lot of it,” she said. “Even if it’s not copied and pasted from their suggested policy language, the intent is the same.”

ALEC brings together state legislators and corporate leaders to write legislation that works for “limited government, free markets, and federalism,” according to the organization’s website. Sen. Bill Seitz, R-Cincinnati, one of the leading backers of the Ohio bill, is an ALEC board member.

Seitz said S.B. 310 is the result of discussions within Ohio in response to Ohio law, and is not the result of actions by outside players.

“It is a little ridiculous to try to drag ALEC into this,” he said.

dgearino@dispatch.com

@dispatchenergy

Rural electric cooperative leaders join Obama at solar announcement; Are electric co-ops doing solar in your state?

Posted by Laura Arnold  /   May 20, 2014  /   Posted in Uncategorized  /   No Comments

Co-op Leaders Join Obama at Solar Announcement

By Michael W. Kahn | ECT Staff WriterPublished: May 12th, 2014

Electric cooperative leaders were front and center when President Obama unveiled a major solar energy initiative.

 

President Obama mentioned how rural electric cooperatives are using solar during a May 9 speech in Mountain View, Calif. (Photo By: Kevin Lamarque/Reuters/Newscom)

President Obama mentioned how rural electric cooperatives are using solar during a May 9 speech in Mountain View, Calif. (Photo By: Kevin Lamarque/Reuters/Newscom)

Bob Marshall, general manager of Plumas-Sierra Rural Electric Co-op, David Gottula, general manager of Okanogan County Electric Co-op, and Kevin Short, general manager of Anza Electric Cooperative, joined the president at a May 9 event in Mountain View, Calif.

“Today, no matter where you live or where you do business, solar is getting cheaper and it’s getting easier to use than before. And with more businesses and rural cooperatives and homes choosing solar, prices keep coming down, manufacturers keep getting more innovative, and more jobs are created,” Obama told the crowd inside a Wal-Mart that has solar panels on the roof.

In a statement, the White House noted, “Across the country, member-owned, not-for-profit rural electric cooperatives are deploying a variety of solar options, including more than 50 community solar projects.

“Today, America’s electric cooperatives are announcing 199 rural electric co-ops in 27 states and American Samoa are planning solar installations that will provide over 150 megawatts of new solar capacity by 2020,” the statement added.

The two co-ops represented at the event are already incorporating cost-effective, reliable solar into their systems.

“Plumas-Sierra has three new programs that we are rolling out,” said Marshall, who had a chat with Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz during the event. “The biggest is a 2-MW solar project that we are implementing with the U.S. Army.” The Portola, Calif.-based co-op will own the solar system, which will be at the Sierra Army Depot in Herlong, Calif.

“We are also about to roll out a community solar and roof-top solar program in the next few months,” Marshall said. “We believe that we can offer a better value than the third party providers.”

At Winthrop, Wash.-based Okanogan County Electric Co-op, Gottula noted that the Methow Valley “enjoys approximately 188 predominately sunny days each year, which, coupled with a strong interest in solar within our community, has led to a relatively high concentration of solar generation our valley.”

Almost two-thirds of OCEC’s annual 165,000 kilowatt-hours of solar come from residential systems that feed excess energy into the grid when it’s sunny, and draw from the grid at other times.

“Drive along just about any open area in the Valley and you are likely to see arrays of solar panels,” said Paul Taylor, president of the OCEC board.

The co-op also has two community solar projects, one of which is at its headquarters.

Marshall and Gottula shared the stage with Obama barely three weeks after another group of co-op leaders attended the White House Solar Summit.

NRECA CEO Jo Ann Emerson noted that co-ops are “leveraging the benefits of cost-effective solar for their consumer-members.”

“True to the principle of putting members first,” Emerson said, “co-ops are leading in the development of community solar, an innovation that allows more consumers access to the benefits of solar.”

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